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From TV Idiot to Media Literate


Article # : 16826 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 9 / 1989  1,913 Words
Author : Robert James
Robert James works in advertising in Washington, D.C.

       Sixth-grade teacher Alan Lengel realized he was getting through to his students when, in the midst of a classroom discussion about stereotypes, twelve-year-old Matt volunteered his criticism of a popular TV program. Matt disliked the way the show consistently portrayed adults--especially parents. In his opinion, the show always made grown-ups "look stupid." "It doesn't teach you to respect your parents," he complained.
       
        In fact, the program Matt criticizes, "You Can't Do That on Television," while intending jest, does a daily hatchet job on adults. Teachers are presented as foolish and petty bureaucrats, service workers are slovenly and rude, and parents are either feather-brained Milquetoasts or overweight, drunken slobs.
       
        Lengel was pleased because in his classes he had been teaching to combat the effects that the continual presentation of stereotypes--through television and other mass media--have on children's perceptions of themselves and society. "If kids are given the opportunity to analyze and evaluate media, they stand a chance of shaking themselves away from conformity," he says. "If they can learn to evaluate media, they can begin to see how they are so often duped and manipulated, instead of informed."
       
        But there is an active antipathy toward television and other media in many classrooms, according to Marieli Rowe, executive director of the National Telemedia Council, which is dedicated to developing children's "critical viewing" skills. She says that "media literacy" has been inadvertently discouraged due to "the historic warfare against television in the schools." Media literacy means "knowing how to cope with ... (1990 of 11881 Characters)
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